23.1 C
Surat
Monday, February 10, 2025
23.1 C
Surat
Monday, February 10, 2025

James Webb Space Telescope’s ‘big sky images’ issued on stamps in Big Sky, Montana


The vast, unobstructed skies that gave Big Sky, Montana its name made for an appropriate setting for the release of two new United States postage stamps depicting the seemingly infinite vistas visible to the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST).

As the location of the “First Day of Issue” for the U.S. Postal Service’s (USPS) 2025 Priority Mail and Priority Mail Express stamps, Big Sky ceremonially began the nationwide sales of the colorful postage featuring images of a sprawling galaxy and a wispy nebula on Jan. 21.. The release was accompanied by the availability of related collectibles, including First Day of Issue “covers” — what collectors call stamped and postmarked envelopes.

“NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope is the largest and most sensitive infrared telescope ever deployed in space. Revealing the cosmos in vivid infrared detail, it is designed to provide scientists with breathtaking images and new data. It is already providing new insights into our cosmic origins and revealing new questions about the universe to explore,” reads USPS’ description of the stamps.

Both the Priority Mail “Spiral Galaxy” and Priority Mail Express “Star Cluster” stamps are sold in panes of four. (Image credit: USPS)

The $10.10 Priority Mail “Spiral Galaxy” stamp shows NGC 628, a “celestial nautilus” located 32 million light years from Earth. Captured by Webb in 2022, “this and other images of spiral galaxies help scientists investigate the star formation cycle in galaxies on an unprecedented new scale and provide valuable new clues to the origins of our universe,” according to the postal service.



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